Blackmail is an act, often a crime, involving unjustified threats to make a gain (commonly money or property) or cause loss to another unless a demand is met. Essentially, it is
coercion involving threats to reveal
substantially true or false information about a person to the public, a family member, or associates, or threats of physical harm or criminal prosecution. It is the name of a
statutory offence in the
United States of America,
England and Wales,
Northern Ireland,
Victoria, Australia, and Tasmania, and has been used as a convenient way of referring to other offences, but was not a term of art in
English law before 1968. It originally meant payments rendered by settlers in the Counties of England bordering
Scotland to chieftains and the like in the
Scottish Lowlands, in exchange for protection from Scottish thieves and marauders into England.